Main Reason Why Your Shoulder is Always Killing You
Main Reason Why Your Shoulder Is Always killing you
Read this if you're constantly begging for a massage.
The scene: Scandal is about to start, and you’re really craving an Olivia Pope-approved dinner of red wine and popcorn.
But
when you go to grab your microwave popcorn stash from the top shelf of
your pantry, you wince. And then, when you try to uncork the bottle of
wine, you struggle. You’re sore, and it’s not because you’ve been on
your feet handling the nation’s capital’s messiest dramas, love
triangles, and secret spy organizations. But you also haven’t done any
shoulder-specific workouts lately. So why are your achy shoulders
keeping you from living your best Fitz-and-Jake-loving life?
“The shoulder is the most mobile joint in the body, which means there are a lot of things that can go wrong with it,” says Mike Riccardi, a physical therapist at Finish Line Physical Therapy in New York City.
“If your shoulders hurt, it’s probably from a combination of a few
things, because the shoulder joint is complex. But the one overarching
cause is poor posture.” (Did you just straighten up in your chair?)
According
to Riccardi, poor posture can cause muscle imbalances with certain
muscles getting too tight and others getting too stretched out and
weaker. “These imbalances in strength and tension cause the humerus—or the arm bone—to not sit perfectly well on the shoulder blade,”
he says. And since those imbalances are often the result of sitting at a
desk or hunching over a keyboard all day, fixing your posture is
crucial if you want your shoulders to stop hurting and function the way
they should. (And so you can reach your popcorn and eat it, too!)
So why exactly is the shoulder joint considered to be so complex? “There’s a lot to it,” says Riccardi. “It’s
the articulation of your humerus on your scapula. The arm moves on the
shoulder blade, and the shoulder blade moves on the ribcage. There’s
also the clavicle, which interacts with the sternum and the scapula.
With so much going on, anything from common muscle strains to ligament
sprains, rotator cuff tears, labral tears, bursitis, dislocations,
subluxations, and ligamentous laxity can all affect the shoulder and
cause pain or discomfort.”
If you
have perfect posture and your shoulders still hurt, there are a few
reasons why. While some of injuries are brought on by overuse or too
much exercise with poor form, others—like labral or rotator cuff
tears—could be more traumatic in nature. “Although pain in the
shoulders might not necessarily be from exercising or a car accident,
for example, you can get pain in your shoulders without overuse or
trauma,” Riccardi says. “One of the most common injuries
affecting the shoulder is what’s called shoulder impingement. That’s
when the slide and glide of the two bones don’t match up perfectly, and
something ends up getting pinched when you’re doing something like
reaching overhead.” If the pain persists, always see a doctor—and consider getting a step stool for those hard-to-reach nighttime snacks.
Riccardi
says that step one of fixing your posture should be to open up your
chest, so start by lying vertically on a foam roller so it's along the
length of your spine, then let your arms hang out to the side, bending
at the elbows to a 90-degree angle. This will help open up your pectoral
muscles, releasing some pressure in your back. While this is a great
starting point, definitely make an appointment with a doctor or physical
therapist, who can help you fix the problem for good.
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